1969: The LOGICAL BASSOON - The ULTIMATE Bassoon? | Tomorrow's World | Retro Tech | BBC Archive

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  • Опубликовано: 29 авг 2024
  • "It's as easy to play as a recorder!"
    The bassoon; unwieldy, cumbersome and notoriously difficult to play - until now. The logical bassoon brings the venerable woodwind instrument firmly into the electronic age. Electronic circuits control the note holes, enabling the keys to be grouped together in a pleasingly manageable array.
    But how does it sound? Tomorrow's World pitches the logical bassoon against its soon-to-be obsolete forebear. Prepare to be blown away.
    Originally broadcast 26 March, 1969.
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Комментарии • 28

  • @spiderprint
    @spiderprint Год назад +15

    This video satisfies a question barely any person ever asked

    • @PlanetImo
      @PlanetImo Год назад

      True!

    • @NicolasConnault
      @NicolasConnault 5 месяцев назад

      That's only because barely anyone plays the bassoon. As a bassoon player, I know exactly why this question is being asked :)

  • @stepheng8779
    @stepheng8779 Год назад +3

    I like to play Pat Boone on the county bassoon when the evening sun goes down.

  • @egparis18
    @egparis18 Год назад +13

    In 2023, I don't see anybody playing a logical bassoon in any orchestra.

    • @AtheistOrphan
      @AtheistOrphan Год назад +1

      But they still play ‘The logical song’ on the radio.

    • @fffffffffffffffffark
      @fffffffffffffffffark Год назад

      They're played by slot badgers and bush dodgers

  • @PlanetImo
    @PlanetImo Год назад +3

    Cor blimey! I'm assuming this hasn't really taken off. I can imagine it finding its place in recording studios...

  • @jasonayres
    @jasonayres Год назад +3

    Dueling Bassoons.
    Yeah, that was fine music from the '60's,alright.
    Why, I'll never forget that long winded concert in 1969..
    Ah.. Woodwind 🤔?

  • @iixorb
    @iixorb Год назад +3

    More from the Tomorrow’s World MIDI special which Howard Stableford presented in 1987 please, BBC 🙏

  • @AaAa-oo4ci
    @AaAa-oo4ci Год назад +2

    i've got to wonder if this had anything to do with the Lyricon from the 70s and other MIDI wind controllers

  • @maryannecross4220
    @maryannecross4220 Год назад

    Wow! 👏👏👏🇬🇧

  • @jamesbennettmusic
    @jamesbennettmusic Год назад +1

    Was this the inspiration for Synthesiser Patel?!

  • @TomEarley
    @TomEarley Год назад +3

    Logical bassoon? Sounds like an instrument used by Vulcans 🖖

    • @PlanetImo
      @PlanetImo Год назад +2

      I don't think this one lived long or prospered...

  • @kaitlyn__L
    @kaitlyn__L Год назад

    The air holes being purely open or closed really restricts the expressive opportunities. You can’t do anything involving half-covered air holes on this one, so they picked the “challenges” to favour the new invention.
    Nowadays there’s wind controllers for MIDI, which basically top everything this achieves in playability, with a wider range and variety of sounds. The market either wants fully authentic analogue bassoons, or is happy to play a bassoon sample pack on a wind controller (if they’re after a bassoon sound at all)
    It’s still pretty cool for the 60s though. That relay control would be fairly easily transferable to the early voltage controlled synthesisers of the time if someone wanted to. Maybe this thing is a grandpa of the first Electronic Wind Instrument and Electronic Valve Instruments, in form factor and hookup if nothing else.

    • @NicolasConnault
      @NicolasConnault 5 месяцев назад

      Most of the expressiveness on the bassoon is achieved through embouchure rather than through fingering, and the host of alternative fingerings, unlike the pragmatic left/right fingerings on the clarinet, are actually just ways to plays slightly less out of tune and reduce some of the nightmare of trills.

    • @kaitlyn__L
      @kaitlyn__L 5 месяцев назад

      @@NicolasConnault I know, I also play conical wind. I regularly use the alternate fingerings to adjust the timbre of a held tone and add some extra texture. I also regularly tremolo with the keys to create a soft portamento effect, while this “logical bassoon” has much sharper cutoffs.
      Funnily enough, I have no idea how it works on tubular wind like a clarinet. Having a twelfth key instead of an octave key is baffling to me, and I have no idea what the alternate fingering would do on a clarinet - except by supposition from your comment that it does actually meaningfully affect the pitch?

    • @NicolasConnault
      @NicolasConnault 5 месяцев назад

      @@kaitlyn__L I'm no expert but from my experiments it appears that the alternative fingerings are mainly designed to make the instrument easier to play, particularly for trills and runs.

    • @kaitlyn__L
      @kaitlyn__L 5 месяцев назад

      @@NicolasConnault alright, so that’s basically the same on tubular wind as with conical.

    • @NicolasConnault
      @NicolasConnault 5 месяцев назад

      @@kaitlyn__L I'm not sure, I feel that the bassoon fingerings are mostly designed to compensate for the instrument's extremely fickle tone, which varies per note for each reed. Or they're designed to torture me 😭

  • @harryjones5260
    @harryjones5260 3 месяца назад

    didnt anyone tell the inventor they dont use the bassoon for high notes anyway

  • @shusamsky
    @shusamsky Год назад

    Was the real bassoon player young Martin Gatt?

  • @davedogge2280
    @davedogge2280 Год назад +2

    This is just a covert video for making a bong.

  • @lucpraslan
    @lucpraslan Год назад

    What the hell is this?! lol 🤪🤪

  • @awreckingball
    @awreckingball Год назад +1

    I remember when TV was mostly made up of boring programmes like this narrated by someone that sounded like Prince Charles.

    • @jeanlefranc3817
      @jeanlefranc3817 Год назад +3

      Sure, but you remember them when I’m sure you have completely forgotten half the RUclips videos you saw last week.